Food.pdf Mar. 2014 | страница 4

OVERVIEW The flavour of success The Food Harvest export target of ¤12bn by 2020 is beginning to look almost easy, writes Alison Healy, Food and Farming Correspondent O nce upon a time, it gave people a small thrill to find Kerrygold butter on the shelf of a supermarket when they travelled abroad. Now, we would be surprised if we didn’t find a range of Irish products on foreign supermarket shelves. Keogh’s crisps can now be bought in Australia, the US and Dubai. You’re as likely to find Cashel Blue cheese in New York as you are in Newbridge. If you feel like one of Glenisk’s yogurts or dairy products, try Dubai, Portugal or Spain. Donegal-based Irish Premium Oysters are firmly established in Tokyo. And most impressively, Broderick’s, the artisan chocolate bar and cake makers, are now selling chocolate to the Swiss. And to the Icelanders, Danish, Russian and Japanese. The list goes on. The success of these products abroad helps to explain why the value of Irish food and drink tipped ¤10 billion last year. The Food Harvest target of reaching ¤12 billion by 2020 is beginning to look almost easy, particularly when the growing global population is considered. It increased by 80 million in the past year and, according to the OECD, three billion people in places such as India, Africa and China will join the middle classes over this and the next decade. Trade missions to far-flung places are no longer just about the meat and dairy sector. Now they are selling our confectionery, snacks, desserts, jams and relishes. The Gulfood exhibition which was recently held in Dubai saw the biggest ever representation of Irish food when 17 firms travelled to the fair. It was a new experience for Keogh’s crisps, which was only set up in 2011 and its managing director Tom Keogh says it was very encouraging to see how Irish food was viewed in the Middle East. “There was a very, very, good reac- 4 |THE IRISH TIMES | March 26, 2014 tion to Irish companies. There were countries from all over the world exhibiting their wares,” he recalls, “but when you went around for a look, there was no comparison when it came to the quality of the products on offer. You could see people’s faces light up when they tasted our crisps.” Nicheproducts While niche products are making great strides, the meat and dairy sectors still account for our most valuable exports by far. Meat and livestock exports accounted for a third of food and drink exports last year and were worth ¤3.3 billion, according to Bord Bia. And dairy products exceeded the ¤3 billion mark for the first time. Milk quotas will be removed next year, leaving Irish farmers free to produce as much milk as they like for the first time in 30 years and the sector has major plans for expansion. Milk volumes are expected to increase by 50 per cent '